Working-Class Americans Face Mounting Economic Struggles

Written by Parriva — September 23, 2025
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With the rising cost of groceries, housing, healthcare, and other essentials a central issue facing communities across the United States due to the Republican agenda, one expert believes that commonly cited economic statistics aren’t capturing the depth of working families’ struggles.

Gene Ludwig, former US comptroller of the currency under President Bill Clinton, is arguing that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) no longer delivers an accurate portrait of families’ hardships because it does not focus enough on the core costs that impact working people on a daily basis.

As reported by Bloomberg on Monday, Ludwig believes the CPI tracks too many goods that are either luxury purchases or are only bought sporadically. A relevant measure of inflation, he told the outlet, should primarily include goods that are essential to living, such as groceries, housing, healthcare, and energy.

Ludwig and his colleagues at the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity have developed their own measurement called True Living Cost (TLC), which focuses on core household needs and excludes items such as plane tickets and golf carts that are included in the CPI formula.

Prices as measured by the TLC have grown 1.3 times faster than prices as measured by the traditional CPI over the last 24 years, which may explain why US consumer sentiment has remained low even during times when the unemployment rate and the rate of inflation have been falling. The biggest gap between TLC and CPI has been in measuring the cost of healthcare, as TLC shows that the rise in costs has been much more severe than what has been shown in traditional inflation statistics.

“In the CPI, medical care mostly measures reimbursements to providers made by private insurers and Medicare, in addition to patient payments, but the TLC tracks only households’ out-of-pocket expenses and contributions to medical and dental plans,” Bloomberg explained. “The CPI shows medical costs have doubled since 2001, whereas the TLC shows they’ve almost tripled, largely from a massive rise in premiums.”

Ludwig’s arguments about traditional inflation measures not capturing the true state of Americans’ fiscal stability were backed up by a report from The Washington Post on Sunday, which examined recent trends in housing, healthcare, food, and utility prices, and found that all of them have been rising faster than the top-line rate of inflation as measured by CPI.

The Post cited the most recent CPI data showing that natural gas bills have risen by nearly 14% over the last year, while electricity bills have risen by 6% over the same period. Grocery prices also registered their biggest spike since 2022, thanks in part to US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported staple foods such as coffee and bananas.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told the Post that these costs are not mere luxuries that people can sacrifice until their financial situation improves.

“It’s not that they have a choice,” he said. “We’re talking about things that people must buy. They have to live somewhere… They have to heat their homes. They need lights.”

A recent CNN report focused on factors related to the most recent spike in grocery prices and found that Trump’s policies were to blame for at least two of them.

Most directly, CNN found that the tariffs on imported foods resulted in higher prices at the grocery store checkout line. Additionally, the Trump administration’s crackdown on undocumented farm workers has harmed the supply of food that’s grown domestically, which has also resulted in price increases.

And finally, CNN reported that droughts exacerbated by human-caused climate change have also hurt supplies of beef and oranges, which have led to further price squeezes.

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